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Monday Morning Musings on Syria

(Ray Close, another CIA friend, who served for years in the Middle East, provided the following analysis this morning.  I am reprinting with his permission.  Larry)

by

Ray Close

This is my Monday morning (speculative) analysis of the mysterious Israeli air attack on Syria on September 6, 2007 (with due thanks to others who have contributed their wise perspectives).

1. The Israelis offered us intelligence that Syria is beginning to develop a nuclear capability based on North Korean technology. They urged the US to cooperate with them in mounting a military attack to destroy the Syrian site. The advantages of this action, as presented to the Bush administration with great urgency by the Israelis, would be:

a. To preempt a new and dangerous violation of Israeli and American proliferation red lines before the Syrian program gets too far along (citing the Iranian experience for justification);

b. To intimidate and embarrass Syria; throw a scare into Iran; and restore Israel’s deterrence credibility. (The historic examples of dramatically successful and awe-inspiring Israeli operations at Entebbe and Osirak, among others, still have great psychological and emotional impact.)

2. The more cautious and thoughtful members of the Bush administration opposed offering Israel the full participatory collaboration of the United States on the grounds that:

a. The Israeli intelligence in this case was not entirely persuasive, recalling instances of flawed intelligence of similar origin that misinformed some key US actions before and during the Iraq war;

b. If covert US-Israeli collaboration in this operation (technically an act of war) were actually proffered, this would eventually become known. The accuracy and authenticity of the Israeli intelligence on which the operational decision was justified would (in the absence of more credible supporting evidence from independent US sources), become the subject of heated public debate all over the world, and opponents of the Bush administration would argue with potentially devastating effect that this was final proof that Bush neocons have continually (in fact, going back many years) been duped by deliberate Israeli disinformation operations aimed at scaring America into adopting a policy of more overt and aggressive military cooperation with Israel;

c. Even if the Israeli intelligence were finally revealed to contain some credible evidence of Syria’s long-range ambitions to obtain nuclear weapons and of North Korea’s culpability in abetting those plans, the revelation of US-Israeli covert military collaboration against Syria at this critical time would, over the short term, endanger George W. Bush’s desperate hopes of achieving some dramatic diplomatic successes before the end of his administration —- most importantly with respect to North Korea and next month’s planned Middle East Peace talks here in the US.

3. Ongoing heated arguments within the administration over whether or not to coordinate US and Israeli actions and reactions in this instance have been won, at least temporarily, by the side that gives higher priority to preserving and sustaining the diplomatic efforts, on the grounds that short-term progress in both the North Korean and Israeli-Palestinian situations should trump, at least for the time being, the acknowledged high value also attached to the more aggressive alternative measures urgently and vigorously advocated by the Olmert government in Israel and by Israel’s supporters here in the United States.

4. There are undoubtedly some Democratic notables, in key Congressional positions of leadership and on the electoral hustings, who have been officially briefed (or who have been independently informed by interested third parties) of the whole set of considerations outlined above, and who have, for reasons best known to themselves, decided to support the more cautious objective of keeping this potentially explosive issue under wraps for as long as possible. (I don’t discount at all the possibility that some support, probably in the form of technical intelligence, was nevertheless indeed provided to the Israeli planners by the US before or during the bombing operation. That just qualifies as a small skeleton in the closet compared to the backlash we would suffer for active operational collaboration in such an undertaking.)

Personally, I believe that the most persuasive reason for studied silence on this subject, on the part of both Republicans and Democrats, is the reluctance (call it fear) of individual politicians that they might be put in a position of appearing to criticize Israel for poor judgment (or even deliberate deception), and thereby appearing to oppose intimate collaboration with Israel (yes, even in acts of illegitimate preemptive military action) against “supporters of terrorism”.

I iwould add the following personal comments to my analysis of the situation:

Having dealt with Arabs for more than fifty years now, often in situations very similar to this one,  have no trouble understanding why the Syrian reaction to the Israeli bombing attack last month has been carefully muted. Asad cannot afford a military confrontation with Israel at this time. His air force and army could be effectively wiped out by the IDF in a few hours. And he has no desire to broadcast the fact that his air defense forces (some of which, I am told, consist of very expensive new ground-to-air rocketry purchased from Russia but not yet operational) were impotent to respond in the face of such a deep and brazen Israeli penetration of the Syrian motherland. It would be plainly foolhardy for the Syrians to attempt confrontation with the IDF when their military establishment is in such a parlous state as it is today. I therefore find it perfectly understandable that Asad has chosen not to fly off the handle over this incident, and why his Arab neighbors and supposed brothers in arms have likewise decided that the better part of valor is to pretend they haven’t noticed.

I recall in the period right after the 1973 Yom Kippur War, when I was in liaison with the Saudis, that the Israeli Air Force used to make frequent very low level runs over the Saudi airbase at Tobuk, in the northern part of the country. As they skimmed the “deck”, they would drop empty fuel tanks on the runways, near where the Saudi fighter planes were lined up, just to remind those on the ground that the empty tanks could very easily have been 500-pound bombs. It was nothing more than an arrogant demonstration of contempt for Saudi impotence. It worked. The RSAF never fired a shot, and never scrambled a single interceptor. They would complain to me, and I would duly forward their protests to CIA HQS. We never got even a polite acknowledgement back from the Israelis, who, in their arrogance, were no doubt cynically amused. So I can easily imagine Bashar al-Asad’s decision to play this current incident in a very low key! It is not a mark of cowardice, but of realism and prudence.

Similarly, I recall when Prince Fahd bin Abdal Aziz called me to a meeting very late one evening in the early days of the 1973 war and asked me to send an urgent personal message from him to Richard Nixon informing the president that he had felt obliged to contribute a brigade of Saudi troops to the Golan front to support the Syrian offensive there, but that he had personally instructed the commander of the unit not to fire a single shot. That, Fahd told me with considerable emotion and obvious sincerity, was his solemn promise to his American friend. Again, prudence, wisdom, and desire to maintain a traditional and mutually valuable relationship — motives that were not, I regret to say, received in Washington with the respect and appreciation that they deserved.

  • Montag

    Not to mention the Israeli intelligence fiasco of not understanding that the 1973 simultaneous massing of BOTH Egyptian and Syrian troops on their borders meant war. Since war didn’t fit their pistol at the time it COULDN’T happen, now could it. This became infamous in Israeli history as, “The Oversight.”

  • http://1boringoldman.com Mickey

    I appreciated this post a lot. You have a grasp of the spirit of the Middle East not shared by the rest of us [bloggers], no matter how much we read. There will come a day when understanding the Middle East will be the most important thing, once we disentangle from the chaos produced by BushCo’s absent understanding of the region. Keep such posts coming. Things you just know, like the state of the Syrian Army, are big news to those of us out here in the hinterlands…

  • Thinker

    How things twist and turn. This is the first piece of good news in a long time (on reflection). The World may remain in one piece, yet. Perhaps the neocons are beginning to feel they have pushed it too far and the grand plans of a New World Order should be persponed a while yet.

    Not greatly hopeful on that one, but Bush’s assault on Iran has been put into jeopardy? Or is this another part of the now you see it, now you don’t strategy?

  • Cee

    Since Entebbe was mentioned

    Ahem…
    http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/6710289.stm

    I don’t want to hear one more claim coming from Israel about SHIT!!

    Last Updated: Wednesday, 6 June 2007, 11:16 GMT 12:16 UK

    Israel hijack role ‘was queried’
    By Dan Parkinson
    BBC News

    Idi Amin was thought to have colluded with the hijackers
    It has been seen as a daring raid by crack Israeli troops to rescue dozens of their countrymen held at the mercy of hijackers.

    But newly released documents contain a claim that the 1976 rescue of hostages, kidnapped on an Air France flight and held in Entebbe in Uganda, was not all it seemed.

    A UK government file on the crisis, released from the National Archives, contains a claim that Israel itself was behind the hijacking.

    An unnamed contact from the Euro-Arab Parliamentary Association told a British diplomat in Paris that the Israeli Secret Service, the Shin Bet, and the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) collaborated to seize the plane.

    The flight was seized shortly after it took off from Athens and was flown to Entebbe, where 98 people were held hostage, many of them Israeli citizens.

    Ugandans killed

    Israeli commandos brought the crisis to an end, storming the airport and overpowering the seven hijackers and about 80 Ugandan soldiers in a 36-minute battle.

    Two Israeli civilian hostages died in the shooting, and a third died later in a Nairobi hospital. One officer commanding the raiders was killed by shooting from the airport tower.

    Ugandan President Idi Amin claimed the troops killed 20 Ugandan servicemen as well as all the hijackers.

    The hijackers demands included a list of countries that should release Palestinians or others fighting for the Palestinian cause.

    In the document, written on 30 June 1976 when the crisis was still unresolved, DH Colvin of the Paris Embassy writes of his Euro-Arab Parliamentary Association source: “According to his information, the hijack was the work of the PFLP, with help from the Israeli Secret Service, the Shin Beit.

    “The operation was designed to torpedo the PLO’s standing in France and to prevent what they see as a growing rapprochement between the PLO and the Americans.”

    The hostages were held at Entebbe Airport

    He adds: “My contact said the PFLP had attracted all sorts of wild elements, some of whom had been planted by the Israelis.”

    The documents also reveal that the British government debated whether or not to praise the Israeli raid after its completion.

    It was decided in the days after the raid that it was not clear whether the Israeli offensive was justified under international law.

    One document in the file reads: “The Israelis have been critical of the fact that the prime minister did not send a personal message of congratulations to Mr Rabin and that our public statement fell short of endorsement of the Israeli action at Entebbe.”

    The file also contains correspondence from UK citizens to the government expressing concern that the government had not expressed support for the Israelis.

    ‘Collusion’

    One letter reads: “I am writing to find out our policy towards terrorism. I find it deplorable that there was not a statement made congratulating Israel on the successful rescue.”

    But in a document dated 9 July an official cautions against such a statement because there is likely to be “no internationally agreed view about the legality of the Israeli action”.

    The document says the legality of it would depend on whether or not the Ugandans had helped the kidnappers.

    In a draft document included in the file an official says it appears Idi Amin did collude with the hijackers.

    It reads: “On balance it seems that there was a culpable degree of collusion between President Amin and the hijackers, and that the president’s attitude made it much easier for the hijackers to persist in their demands.”

    The file does not make it clear how seriously the government took the claim that Israel also may have aided the hijackers.

  • Cee

    I went to locate another article about Entebbe. No wonder Netanyahu is such a bitter and hateful man. A crackpot plan failed. He hasn’t learned a lesson.

    20 Ugandans and the commander of the rescue team, Yoni Netanyahu, brother of current opposition head Binyamin Netanyahu (Likud).

    The hijackers, from the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) and the German Baader-Meinhof gang, demanded the release of Palestinian prisoners.

    But according to the newly released documents, the Shin Bet and the PFLP are alleged to have teamed up in an “unholy alliance” in an attempt to change foreign policy in the Middle East.

    http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1180527980537&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowFull#

  • Bill Keyes

    Very good article, Mr Close.

    It is always good to hear the truth instead of more political spin.

    I would like to quote a couple of his paragraphs…

    First…

    “The more cautious and thoughtful members of the Bush administration opposed offering Israel the full participatory collaboration of the United States on the grounds that:….

    Second

    “….The Israeli intelligence in this case was not entirely persuasive, recalling instances of flawed intelligence of similar origin that misinformed some key US actions before and during the Iraq war;…..

    Two things jump out here…

    “…..instances of flawed intelligence of similar origin that misinformed some key US actions before and during the Iraq war;…..

    Now that is an understatement. Is he saying that “flawed Israeli intelligence”
    affected some key US actions before and after the Iraq war?

    If so what actions, and how did the “flawed intelligence” affect these “key US actions”?

    Was this “flawed intelligence” more of the so called “cherry picking” of intelligence by Bushco to justify invading Iraq?

    “The more cautious and thoughtful members of the Bush administration….”

    Another tremendous understatement, is he implying that even today there are “more cautious and thoughtful members of the Bush administration?”

    I thought any of these people, if they ever existed, were summarily fired, given a Medal of Freedom and dispatched to Cheney’s ranch to shovel horse manure (Cheney’s ranch= hell on earth) for daring to question how the prewar intelligence was being used to “justify ” invading Iraq.

    The obvious conclusion here is that, and I will change his quote slightly, “if SANER members of the Bush administration” had prevailed 5 years ago we might not be in the mess we are in today.

    I have nothing but great admiration and respect for Ray Close, Ray McGovern, Larry, Valerie Plame and countless others in the CIA who while operating in secrecy (which has to be done for them to be effective) are true patriots who believed that what they were doing was truly in the best interest of the the role of the US in the world.

    How could they have know that a bunch of criminal thugs and greedy empire builders had taken reins of our and their government and used their hard work and devotion to their work for their own ends.

    Of all the emotions one can feel, betrayal is probably the hardest to deal with.

    All of them were betrayed in some fashion by their country as well as most of the rest of us.

    Lastly I would like to express admiration for Larry’s friend and co-worker Valerie Plame. a classy lady who along with her husband deserves our praise,
    thanks, and respect for their devotion to this great country of ours.

  • sheerahkahn

    Hmm, that does explain why the Arab gov’s haven’t been hopping around demanding apology.
    The only thing is how do we rein in Israel…how do we get them to “back it down?”

    • Shirin

      We who? Surely you don’t think for a moment that the U.S. government has – or has ever had – any desire or intention to rein in Israel, do you? Certainly the administration does not, and in fact they seem to be in collaboration with them, and I doubt more than a handful of Congress members do either.

  • Ardie

    We should not forget the roots of Israel’s policy with regard to the Arabs.

    The Israeli right was originally secular and, to a certain extent, still is. Genealogically, it is in the tradition of Vladimir Jabotinsky’s (1880-1940) Revisionist Party and that of Herut, the political party that succeeded it and, in turn, was succeeded by Likud. Jabotinsky was not a religious believer, and he did not wholly approve of the early terrorist operations of the Irgun. There was nothing messianic about his politics. He and his followers simply assumed that, in order to survive, the country had to be of a certain size, with borders that could be defended. They also believed that since the Arabs would respect only force, not much effort should be wasted on chasing the phantom of peace. This was, broadly speaking, the philosophy of Menachem Begin, Jabotinsky’s faithful disciple, and of Begin’s successors, who included secular leaders such as Ariel Sharon, a former defense minister, and Rafael Eitan, a former chief of staff. Indeed, Eitan was not only secular in outlook but deeply critical of organized religion in Israel. — The New Terrorism: Fanaticism and the Arms of Mass Destruction by Walter Laqueur, 1999

  • Linda

    Another thing that might slow down the US and Israels’ plan for an illegal attack on Iran is a move by Turkey against the Kurds. I can tell that they’re very nervous about this. Plus they (including the CIA?) have been cultivating the Kurds in Iran to soften up the regime (and the Azeris and Arabs). What will happen to these covert ops if war breaks out (or another war, I should say) nothern Iraq?

    But I guess no mess is big enough that these people aren’t willing to add to it. I keep wondering why everything hasn’t gone up in flames already. Then, I remember, for the Arabs they HAVE.

    • Cee

      Who pushed for the Armenian genocide ill-timed resolution? I’ve been meaning to check and haven’t gotten around to it.

      Lou Dobbs asked why the Armenians have a lobby and working Americans don’t!

      • Linda

        I have wondered about the timing of the Armenian resolution. It seems unlikely (since the dems also support the war) but maybe it’s an attempt to throw a spanner into the war. I think it’s great. It acknowleges a genocide in which the perpetrators have been particularly arrogant and insensitive and it may shut down Turkey’s tacit support of the war. This could derail the continuing blood bath that the US has planned for the Middle East.

        • Delia

          My suspicion on the Armenian resolution — the dems are too spineless to actually stand up against the war. So they take this passive-aggressive approach. There’s a very large Armenian community in California, and this resolution is a pet issue of theirs. They’ve been pushing it since forever and it’s never politically convenient to pass it. So now all of a sudden Pelosi, pushes the Armenian resolution, and we’ll just see if it pisses off the Turks enough to make them do something that the US Congress is too scared to do.

  • Mr.Murder

    We pass an Armenian resolution it would precedent statements vs. the United States regarding Native Americans.

    Abramoff’s connections would want to put a stop to that.

    Mention the amount of Armenian Christians being made part of the item. Let’s hear Ralph Reid squirm away from his buddy’s portfolio of water and energy firms eying Northern Iraq from both sides of the northern fence…

  • Thinker

    Mr M, CEE has stolen your thunder. It’s about time someone got to the nub of this.

    Do ratbags ever change their spots?

    No. So look at the past to discern the future. BTW, I for one am VERY pleased by the information presented within this thread, if not alarmed by its content.

    P.S. I have been informed not all suicide attacks in Israel have been Arab cause driven and the Israelis have just as an effective recruitment campaign. Difference being is they are prepared to use theirs on their own. There, apparently, is no limit to their scullduggery. In the spirit of the celebration of Stalin, “the end truly justifies the means.”